Atomic Habits: Part 1 - Deepstash
Atomic Habits: Part 1

Atomic Habits: Part 1

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The Power of Tiny Habits

The Power of Tiny Habits

Small daily habits compound over time, creating massive impact.

1% improvement every day = 37x better in a year.

Key Idea: Focus on systems, not just goals.

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953 reads

JAMES CLEAR

β€œEvery action you take is a vote for the type of person you wish to become.”

JAMES CLEAR

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864 reads

πŸ“Œ Why Tiny Habits Matter?

πŸ“Œ Why Tiny Habits Matter?

βœ… They bypass the brain’s resistance to change.

βœ… They accumulate into meaningful transformations.

βœ… They create identity-based behavioral shift

s.

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772 reads

Identity-Based Habits – Becoming the Person You Want to Be

Identity-Based Habits – Becoming the Person You Want to Be

Most people focus on goals (outcomes), but true change happens at the identity level.

3 Levels of Behavior Change:

  1. Outcome-Based Change – "I want to lose weight."
  2. Process-Based Change – "I will follow a workout plan."
  3. Identity-Based Change – "I am a fit and healthy person."

Instead of focusing only on the end result, focus on who you want to be and let your actions follow suit. By identifying as the person you want to become, you are more likely to make lasting changes in your behavior and achieve your goals

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621 reads

πŸ“Œ How to Apply It?

πŸ“Œ How to Apply It?

πŸ”Ή Instead of saying, "I want to run," say, "I am a runner."
πŸ”Ή Align actions with the type of person you want to become.
πŸ”Ή Small wins reinforce your new identity.

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569 reads

JAMES CLEAR

β€œTrue behavior change is identity change.”

JAMES CLEAR

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628 reads

The 4 Laws of Behavior Change – Building Good Habits

The 4 Laws of Behavior Change – Building Good Habits

James Clear's habit-building framework follows these four laws:

  1. Law 1: Make It Obvious
  2. Law 2: Make It Attractive
  3. Law 3: Make It Easy
  4. Law 4: Make It Satisfying

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βœ… Law 1: Make It Obvious

βœ… Law 1: Make It Obvious

Design your environment to trigger positive habits.

Use implementation intentions:

β€œI will [DO X] at [TIME] in [PLACE].”

Habit stacking: Pair a new habit with an existing one.

  • Example: β€œAfter brushing my teeth, I will meditate for one minute.”

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497 reads

β€œYou don’t need motivation; you need clarity.”

JAMES CLEAR

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551 reads

βœ… Law 2: Make It Attractive

βœ… Law 2: Make It Attractive

Use temptation bundling to build good habits - pair something you need to do with something you want to do.

Surround yourself with people who already have the habits you desire.

  • Example: "I'll listen to my favorite🎧 only when I exercise."

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438 reads

β€œYour habits are influenced by the people around you.”

JAMES CLEAR

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472 reads

βœ… Law 3: Make It Easy

βœ… Law 3: Make It Easy

Reduce friction β†’ Make good habits easier and bad habits harder.

    Key tips:
  • Use the 2-minute rule: Start small so you can't fail.
  • Example: Instead of "Read 20 pages," start with "Read one sentence."

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417 reads

β€œA habit must be established before it can be improved.”

JAMES CLEAR

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440 reads

βœ… Law 4: Make It Satisfying

βœ… Law 4: Make It Satisfying

Track progress: Seeing small wins motivates continued action.

Use immediate rewards: Reward yourself for completing the habit.

πŸ”Ή Example: "Put a checkmark on a calendar every time you meditate."

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395 reads

β€œWhat is rewarded is repeated. What is punished is avoided.”

JAMES CLEAR

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422 reads

Breaking Bad Habits – Inverting the 4 Laws

Breaking Bad Habits – Inverting the 4 Laws

Just as good habits follow the 4 laws, bad habits can be broken by reversing them.

  • ❌ 1. Make It Invisible β†’ Remove temptations.
  • Example: Keep junk food out of the house.

  • ❌ 2. Make It Unattractive β†’ Reframe your mindset.
  • Example: Instead of β€œI can’t smoke,” say β€œI don’t smoke.”

  • ❌ 3. Make It Difficult β†’ Increase friction.
  • Example: Delete social media apps to reduce mindless scrolling.

  • ❌ 4. Make It Unsatisfying β†’ Add consequences.
  • Example: Use a habit contract: β€œIf I skip the gym, I pay my friend β‚Ή500.”

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348 reads

β€œThe best way to break a bad habit is to make it unsatisfying.”

JAMES CLEAR

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372 reads

The Goldilocks Rule – Stay in the Zone

The Goldilocks Rule – Stay in the Zone

When it comes to being motivated, finding the right balance is key. It's important that our habits are not too easy or too hard. Instead, they should be just challenging enough for us to succeed (4% beyond our skill level). To avoid burnout, we need to balance discipline with recovery.

Remember: Too easy, and we get bored. Too hard, and we get overwhelmed. The sweet spot is in between.

  • Motivation = challenge + success
  • Find the magic 4%
  • Balance discipline & recovery

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336 reads

β€œThe greatest threat to success is not failure but boredom.”

JAMES CLEAR

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359 reads

The Plateau of Latent Potential – Trust the Process

The Plateau of Latent Potential – Trust the Process

Habits compound over time, trust the process even when results are slow.

What to Remember:

  • Progress isn’t always visible at first
  • Breakthroughs happen after crossing the β€˜Valley of Disappointment’

πŸ”₯ Stay consistent and trust the process πŸ”₯

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